Project Details
Description
The incidence of cooperative breeding in birds varies from 0 to 100% between families of birds, and from 25% among birds from different regions. However, there has been no theory that successfully predicts these differences. Recent comparative analysis shows the differences result largely from the early evolution of obligate cooperative breeding in some groups, and their subsequent slow rates of speciation. I will use model systems to investigate how birds can become committed to cooperative breeding despite the inevitable conflicts, and how one group of birds have been freed from the general rules governing the evolution of sociality.
Status | Finished |
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Effective start/end date | 1/01/04 → 31/03/10 |
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